But they added: "We just find it a bit ironic that they pride themselves on their 'loose' opinions yet are so closed minded when it comes to the glamour industry.”

Selfie sisters Lucy, Sophie, and Stacey will NOT be on Loose Women (Image: Sunday Mirror)

The girls get given gifts for their sexy pictures (Image: RobCooper.co.uk)

We’ve contacted Loose Women for comment.

According to the girls they have amassed £75,000-worth of designer shoes and handbags, laptops, iPads , luxury cosmetics and enough flowers to fill a florist’s have come their way. Single Sophie and her sisters, who both have boyfriends, haven’t met any of the blokes funding their flash lifestyles.

They have been caught up in the so-called “rinsing” craze where men lavish gifts on women they spot online but expect nothing in return.

Some spend hundreds a week. But mum-of-one Lucy claims the girls are doing nothing wrong – despite ­admitting to occasional flirty phone calls. The part-time model insisted: “It’s not seedy. It’s hardly like we’re selling our bodies. We’re doing many of these men a favour. They love our pictures and tell us how fun we look. We brighten up their day, in an innocent way.

“We’d never meet or do anything sexual. We’re not like that. My boyfriend doesn’t have a problem with it. He thinks it’s funny, if anything. Although he’s stuck on what to get for Christmas as I already have so much.”

(Image: RobCooper.co.uk)

The girls, who own a hair and beauty salon in St Albans, Herts, get flowers every week.

Lucy, the salon’s marketing manager, added: “These men are harmless. Lots have things missing in their lives. Maybe they’re lonely or lack ­confidence. They don’t have a glamorous girl to treat at home, so they get a kick out of buying for us. It’s sweet.”

Lucy received her first gift in 2010 when she started sharing pouty selfies on Twitter. She said: “It all started quite innocently. Someone sent a bottle of Marc Jacobs perfume.

"Then more men asked if they could treat me. Some asked if I had a wishlist on Amazon. I thought, ‘why not?’ I won’t lie, I want a nice life.”

A trickle of gifts became a flood when Lucy, who now has 93,000 Twitter followers, shared photos of the trio after their salon opening in 2013. She added: “Everyone commented on how alike we were, our big, blue eyes. It wasn’t just me. They wanted to buy my sisters presents too.”

One admirer pushed things too far and inundated the girls with messages. ­Hairdresser Sophie, a mum of two, said: “It was really quite scary. We all blocked him on Twitter, but he made other accounts to contact us on.

(Image: RobCooper.co.uk)

“Then he rang Lucy to say he was in St Albans and was coming to the salon. We had to get the police involved and he got a restraining order.”

Most men are so smitten that they don’t ask anything in return. Lucy ­occasionally speaks to some on the phone. She said: “Some want to chat. I flirt, but there is a line they can’t cross.

“I never give the impression we’ll do anything but talk. I spoke to one man after his wife had died.

“He said I helped him through a tough time. He insisted on buying Vivienne ­Westwood bags and shoes. It made him feel good.”

Some rinsers snub admirers and dub them “slaves” and “pay pigs”.

But Lucy says the sisters remain popular because they show respect.

She added: “We know how lucky we are. What girl doesn’t love to be spoiled? Some people might criticise us, but if someone sent them a beautiful new pair of shoes, would they return them? I doubt it.